| Literature DB >> 23227348 |
Mark A Lewis1, Timothy J Hobday.
Abstract
In the care of patients with hepatic neuroendocrine metastases, medical oncologists should work in multidisciplinary fashion with surgeons, interventional radiologists, and radiation oncologists to assess the potential utility of liver-directed and systemic therapies. This paper addresses the various roles and evidence basis for cytoreductive surgery, thermal ablation (radiofrequency, microwave, and cryoablation), and embolization (bland embolization (HAE), chemoembolization (HACE), and radioembolization) as liver-directed therapies. Somatostatin analogues, cytotoxic chemotherapy, and the newer agents everolimus and suntinib are discussed as a means for controlling intra- and extrahepatic disease, along with peptide receptor radiotherapy (PRRT). Finally, the experience with orthotopic liver transplant for neuroendocrine tumors is described.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23227348 PMCID: PMC3512291 DOI: 10.1155/2012/973946
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Hepatol
Summary of outcome from resection of neuroendocrine liver metastases.
| First author, publication year | Number of surgical patients | Median followup, months | Survival data | Predictors of survival |
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| Mayo, 2011 [ | 339 | 26 | Median OS: 123 months | High-volume (>25% liver involved) and symptomatic disease benefited most from surgery (versus intra-arterial therapy, |
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| Saxena, 2011 [ | 74 | 41 | Median PFS: 23 months | PFS: pathologic margin status ( |
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| Karabulut, 2011 [ | 27 | 29 | Median PFS: 15 months | Improved OS with resection of primary tumor ( |
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| Glazer, 2010 [ | 172 | 50 | Median OS: 116 months | Increasing interval from primary resection to hepatic metastases predicted for poorer survival ( |
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| Fischer, 2008 [ | 118 | 20 | 5-year survival: 44% for well-differentiated neuroendocrine carcinoma versus 0% for poorly-differentiated | In well-differentiated carcinomas, any resection (R0 versus R1/2) significantly increased survival ( |
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| Osborne, 2006 [ | 70 | Mean OS: 50 months for complete cytoreduction (versus 32 months for palliative cytoreduction) | ||
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| Sarmiento, 2003 [ | 170 | Median OS: 81 months | ||
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| Elias, 2003 [ | 47 | 62 | Median OS: 91 months | DFS: completeness of surgery (R0 versus R1 versus R2) ( |
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| Chen, 1998 [ | 15 | 5-year survival: 73% (versus 29% in 23 patients with unresectable disease) | ||
Summary of outcomes for ablation of neuroendocrine liver metastases.
| Author, publication year | Number of ablated patients | Median followup, months | Survival data | Comments |
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Karabulut et al., 2011 [ | 69 | 22 | Median PFS: 10.5 months | No significant overall survival difference between RFA and resection |
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Akyildiz et al., 2010 [ | 89 | 30 | Median DFS: 15.6 months | Liver tumor volume (>76 cc versus <30 cc, |
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Martin et al., 2010 [ | 11 | 36 | Median DFS: 8 months | Zero recurrences at ablation site |
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Mazzaglia et al., 2007 [ | 63 | 34 | Median OS: 47 months after 1st RFA | Male gender (3x mortality risk of female) ( |
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Gillams and Lees, 2005 [ | 25 | 21 (in 19 patients) | Median OS: 29 months | Shorter survival (23 months) in carcinoid patients |
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Seifert et al., 1998 [ | 13 | 13.5 | 12 patients alive at the end of followup (up to 103 months) | All 7 symptomatic patients had subjective improvement |
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Shapiro et al., 1998 [ | 5 | 30 | 1-year survival: 60% | All 5 patients had relief of carcinoid syndrome |
Summary of outcomes for intra-arterial therapy of neuroendocrine liver metastases.
| First author, publication year | Number of embolized patients | Survival data | Comments |
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| Paprottka, 2011 [ | 42 | 40 of 42 patients alive with mean followup of 16.2 months | No radiation-induced liver failure; 36 of 38 symptomatic patients improved clinically within 3 months |
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| Kennedy, 2008 [ | 148 | Median OS: 70 months | No radiation-induced liver failure |
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| Strosberg, 2006 [ | 84 | Median OS: 36 months | Fewer symptoms in 44 of 55 symptomatic patients |
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| Gupta, 2005 [ | 123 | Median OS (carcinoid): 33.8 months | Male gender (versus female) predicted worse OS ( |
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| Dong, 2011 [ | 123 | Mean OS: 39.6 months | Baseline albumin <3.5 g/dL was multivariate predictor for poorer OS ( |
Summary of outcomes for liver transplantation for neuroendocrine metastases.
| Author, publication year | Number of liver transplant (LT) patients | Survival data | Predictors of survival |
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Gedaly et al., 2011 [ | 150 | 49% 5-year survival | Improved survival with patients waiting more than 2 months for transplant ( |
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Mathe et al., 2011 [ | 89 | 44% 5-year survival | 0% survival if >55 years old undergoing simultaneous pancreatic resection |
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Le Treut et al., 2008 [ | 85 | Median OS: 56 months | Exenteration, duodeno-pancreatic primary, and hepatomegaly were indicators of poor prognosis (all RR of death > 2.6) |
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Rosenau et al., 2002 [ | 19 | 50% 10-year survival | Ki-67 <5% and normal E-cadherin expression had 100% 7-year survival |